Code::TidyAll - Engine for tidyall, your all-in-one code tidier and validator
version 0.79
use Code::TidyAll; my $ct = Code::TidyAll->new_from_conf_file( '/path/to/conf/file', ... ); # or my $ct = Code::TidyAll->new( root_dir => '/path/to/root', plugins => { perltidy => { select => 'lib/**/*.(pl|pm)', argv => '-noll -it=2', }, ... } ); # then... $ct->process_paths($file1, $file2);
This is the engine used by tidyall - read that first to get an overview.
You can call this API from your own program instead of executing tidyall.
tidyall
This class offers the following methods:
The regular constructor. Must pass at least plugins and root_dir.
Takes a conf file path, followed optionally by a set of key/value parameters. Reads parameters out of the conf file and combines them with the passed parameters (the latter take precedence), and calls the regular constructor.
If the conf file or params defines tidyall_class, then that class is constructed instead of Code::TidyAll.
Code::TidyAll
plugins
Specify a hash of plugins, each of which is itself a hash of options. This is equivalent to what would be parsed out of the sections in the configuration file.
selected_plugins
An arrayref of plugins to be used. This overrides the mode parameter.
mode
This is really only useful if you're getting configuration from a config file and want to narrow the set of plugins to be run.
Note that plugins will still only run on files which match their select and ignore configuration.
select
ignore
cache_model_class
The cache model class. Defaults to Code::TidyAll::CacheModel
Code::TidyAll::CacheModel
cache
The cache instance (e.g. an instance of Code::TidyAll::Cache or a CHI instance.) An instance of Code::TidyAll::Cache is automatically instantiated by default.
Code::TidyAll::Cache
CHI
backup_ttl
check_only
If this is true, then we simply check that files pass validation steps and that tidying them does not change the file. Any changes from tidying are not actually written back to the file.
no_cleanup
A boolean indicating if we should skip cleaning temporary files or not. Defaults to false.
inc
An arrayref of directories to prepend to @INC. This can be set via the command-line as -I, but you can also set it in a config file.
@INC
-I
This affects both loading and running plugins.
data_dir
iterations
no_backups
no_cache
output_suffix
quiet
root_dir
verbose
These options are the same as the equivalent tidyall command-line options, replacing dashes with underscore (e.g. the backup-ttl option becomes backup_ttl here).
backup-ttl
msg_outputter
This is a subroutine reference that is called whenever a message needs to be printed in some way. The sub receives a sprintf() format string followed by one or more parameters. The default sub used simply calls printf "$format\n", @_ but Test::Code::TidyAll overrides this to use the Test::Builder->diag method.
sprintf()
printf "$format\n", @_
Test::Builder->diag
This method iterates through a list of paths, processing all the files it finds. It will descend into subdirectories if recursive flag is true. Returns a list of Code::TidyAll::Result objects, one for each file.
recursive
Process the one file, meaning:
Check the cache and return immediately if file has not changed.
Apply appropriate matching plugins.
Print success or failure result to STDOUT, depending on quiet/verbose settings.
Write to the cache if caching is enabled.
Return a Code::TidyAll::Result object.
Like process_file, but process the source string instead of a file, and does not read from or write to the cache. You must still pass the relative path from the root as the second argument, so that we know which plugins to apply. Returns a Code::TidyAll::Result object.
process_file
Given a relative path from the root, returns a list of Code::TidyAll::Plugin objects that apply to it, or an empty list if no plugins apply.
Returns a list of sorted files that match at least one plugin in configuration.
Start in the start_dir and work upwards, looking for a file matching one of the conf_names. Returns the pathname if found or throw an error if not found.
Bugs may be submitted at https://github.com/houseabsolute/perl-code-tidyall/issues.
The source code repository for Code-TidyAll can be found at https://github.com/houseabsolute/perl-code-tidyall.
Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>
Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
Adam Herzog <adam@adamherzog.com>
Andy Jack <andyjack@cpan.org>
Bernhard Schmalhofer <Bernhard.Schmalhofer@gmx.de>
Finn Smith <finn@timeghost.net>
George Hartzell <georgewh@gene.com>
Graham Knop <haarg@haarg.org>
Gregory Oschwald <goschwald@maxmind.com>
Joe Crotty <joe.crotty@returnpath.net>
Kenneth Ölwing <kenneth.olwing@skatteverket.se>
Mark Fowler <mark@twoshortplanks.com>
Mark Grimes <mgrimes@cpan.org>
Martin Gruner <martin.gruner@otrs.com>
Mohammad S Anwar <mohammad.anwar@yahoo.com>
Nick Tonkin <ntonkin@bur-ntonkin-m1.corp.endurance.com>
Olaf Alders <olaf@wundersolutions.com>
Pedro Melo <melo@simplicidade.org>
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
Sergey Romanov <sromanov-dev@yandex.ru>
Shlomi Fish <shlomif@shlomifish.org>
timgimyee <tim.gim.yee@gmail.com>
This software is copyright (c) 2011 - 2021 by Jonathan Swartz.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this distribution.
To install Code::TidyAll, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Code::TidyAll
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Code::TidyAll
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.